By Linas
As we have remembered, tas is it when it is with ir for our purposes (more accurately: when it is the subject) and ta in other cases so far (more accurately: when it is the object). Let’s learn about the interesting way in which Latvians express the concept of having. First...
Latvian for to me or for me is man.
Say:
What if you wanted to say I have it? Well:
The Latvian construction for the phrase I have something is to me is something.
Try saying:
Latvian for time is laiks.
Latvian for to you or for you is tev.
You could thus say:
And even:
Fair enough. What if you wanted to say I don’t have it? Well, you would be saying to me not is it. What’s not is? It should be ne + ir or neir but there is actually a different word in Latvian for this:
Latvian for not is or isn’t is nav.
The word nav acts just like ne does and in fact even stronger and it changes tas to tā always! How would you say:
This is good. Just to let you know that nav means isn’t in all cases, say:
Alright, now since we know man and tev, we also have another use for them:
Adding jā in front of a word makes that word (say does) into must-be-done.
Thus if you want to say I must do something you are saying to me jā"does" something.
For example, we know that Latvian for he understands is saprot. If you want to say I must understand you would be saying man jāsaprot which means to me "must-be-understood" or to me "needed-be-understood". You could also add ir for is and say man ir jāsaprot which would mean to me it is needed to be understood or simply I must understand it.
Try this with:
Think this out thoroughly. You are in fact saying more literally to you it must-be-could to understand.
I am aware that this looks a bit complicated but it’s not very much so...
Anyway, here is another way to use man and tev:
Latvian for pleases is patīk.
And here is the thing:
If you want to say I like something you say something pleases to me or in the usual word order to me something pleases in Latvian.
Both ways to order words are okay (Latvian is generally pretty flexible about it) but the second one is more common. With patīk you are always using tas as the word for it. Try saying:
Always using tas means always. Say:
Answer that:
That’s the end of lesson four.